With over 40 million copies sold worldwide, Berlitz Pocket Guides have long been renowned for their ease of use and portability by booksellers and travelers alike. Redesigned and updated, Pocket Guides continue to provide a world of information for travel at any budget -- and still fit into a pocket.
Those pioneers soon moved to farming, and Orlando became the center of the Florida citrus industry. Join author and historian James C. Clark as he reveals the remarkable history of one of the world's most popular destinations.
Featuring historic coverage and over 100 photos from the Orlando Sentinel archives, the commemorative edition is a visually stunning chronicle of the place where dreams come true." --
Ketchakiddie Creek is a kiddie area designed exclusively for the kiddie set (2–5 years). An innovative water playground, it has bubbling fountains in which kids can frolic, mini waterslides, a pint-size white-water tubing run, ...
... Johnny Bench, George Steinbrenner, Calvin Griffith, Don Drysdale, Gene Mauch, Chub Feeney, Bob Lemon, Ron Guidry, the “late, great” Ted Williams, Joe Garagiola, Lee MacPhail, Ernie Banks, Joe Cronin, Bowie Kuhn, Bobby Bragan, ...
Get Ready For The Adventure Of A Lifetime! This is a Black and White edition of Travel Like a Local map book. Are you planning your next vacation abroad and you're ready to explore? Do you want to be prepared for everything?
BOB SEHLINGER is the author of The Unofficial Guide to Walt Disney World and The Unofficial Guide to Las Vegas and is also the publisher of The Unofficial Guide series. SETH KUBERSKY is the author of The Unofficial Guide to Universal ...
Orlando, one of the world¿s most popular vacation destinations, boasts a rich and fascinating history. Known for its unique beauty and warm climate, the region played a key role in the early citrus industry and southern migration.
Simultaneously a scathing critique of consumer culture and a heartbreakingly manic narrative of obsession and reckoning.
"Beautiful weather here.
Missing On Tuesday, June 10, 1997, in Orlando, Florida, Carla Ann Larson, 30, left work for a lunch break.